Oracle's Netra SPARC T4-1 server is the SPARC T4 processor based system with throughput offering 2x the I/O bandwidth and 5x improvement in single threaded performance over the previous generation Netra SPARC server, all in a compact 20-inch deep 2 RU chassis. Designed to meet the most demanding telecommunication Web, media services, OSS/BSS, and BRM workloads, the Netra SPARC T4-1 is the ideal platform for consolidation and virtualization of the data center.

The Netra SPARC T4-1 provides a network infrastructure solution with carrier-grade reliability leveraging the chassis from previous generation, hot swappable components such as high efficiency AC or DC power supplies and disk drives.

Technical Specifications

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Rated 4 out of 5 by Erik Benner It's not a one-size-fits-all converged infrastructure system, which means that I can mix things and have convergence throughout the whole stack. Valuable Features:The Netra Modular System is really cool because unlike all the other Oracle solutions, this is a system that is a lot more agile. It's a technology that's the basis of a converged infrastructure, but it's what we work on -- agile convergence. The Netra Modular system lets you do things you can't do with competing products. Competing technologies in convergence force you to use their hypervisor. They force you to use their OS. They force you to use their storage in its configuration. It's very cookie cutter. They're kind of one-size-fits-all and there's no flexibility. If you think it, when's the last time you bought your clothes one-size-fits-all? It just doesn't fit well. People have been doing that with convergence. So what's cool with the Netra Modular System is that it's not one-size-fits-all.I can mix things in it in ways I can't mix on other systems, but when I use Enterprise Manager, I still have the advantages of a converged system. I still have a single pane of glass, but it doesn't do a lot of convergence, just maybe the network, the storage, and the operating system. With Netra and Enterprise Manager, I can start from the network in storage and go all the way up into the application tier. It's convergence throughout the whole stack.Improvements to My Organization:There's a lot benefits with the Netra. First, since it is an agile system, I can mix hypervisors. For free, you're going to get Oracle VM, which is a great hypervisor, but some things don't run well when they're virtualized. They run really better on bare metal. If you need a two-node RAC cluster, and you're really pushing performance through it, you really often want that on bare metal. I can take two nodes of the Netra Modular System and put them as bare metal and run a bare metal OS on them and run them as my RAC cluster. I can't do that in other converged solutions.Second, it's hypervisor agnostic to an extent. If my application needs a couple of nodes for VMware, I can take three, four, eight, however many nodes I want and make a VMware firm on the same frame, but I still have the same monitoring that I did with the hardware. Even with Enterprise Manager, it's extendable into VMware, where I can monitor even inside of VMware. I still have that converged advantage, that single pane of glass. That's, I think, it's big strength.Room for Improvement:What I would love to see is better integration between Enterprise Manager and ES2 switches. That's the one area where the integration isn't as tight as we would like to see. I know that in the new version of Enterprise Manager that's not out yet we'll also get some better control of a bare metal. I'm looking forward to when that becomes available.Deployment Issues:We've had no issues deploying it.Stability Issues:I've been working with it a lot with a proof-of-concept, and it's been rock solid. What's been really cool is the High Availability in it. I had one point where I was working with the system, and we plugged Enterprise Manager into it, and we started monitoring it. We actually found one of the nodes was alerting. Apparently, the power cable wasn't plugged in. No one knew. It continued running, but we were able to detect that and quickly fix it with Enterprise Manager.Scalability Issues:In regards to scalability, you really can't beat it. You can put a lot of nodes in a cabinet, and you can expand cabinets beyond that. I think technically they have a limit, but the reality is you could probably scale the system up to the size of the data center.Technical Support:I don't call tech support very often, but in this particular case I did have to call tech support for a problem I had with Enterprise Manager. The support was okay. They were finally able to come up with a workaround solution after opening up a defect with development.Initial Setup:It's been straightforward. It's not complex. It takes a lot of time, but it's not something that's going to take you a months to do. It's something you can set up within weeks. If you set it up using Oracle VM, once you get that core infrastructure up and running, which doesn't take a huge amount of time, you can start building application components deploying E-Business in an hour or two, deploying PeopleSoft really quick, and start taking advantage of the templates and rapidly deploy apps.Other Solutions Considered:We looked at other technologies coming up with the solution, but, again, the uniqueness of the Netra is the ability to mix hypervisors and mix bare metal and even mix CPU architectures. You didn't have that with any other vendor.Other Advice:Definitely take a look at it is my advice. This is technology that's not well-known. A lot of people don't know about the technology, and it really deserves a strong look. It solves a lot of problems of the data center going to a converged or even a hyper converged environment because it doesn't assume that one size fits all. If I need a hypervisor, I can virtualize it. If I need bare metal, I can run bare metal, but I still have all the advantages of that converged.Disclaimer: IT Central Station contacted the reviewer to collect the review and to validate authenticity. The reviewer was referred by the vendor, but the review is not subject to editing or approval by the vendor. The reviewer's company has a business relationship with this vendor other than being a customer:We're partners. April 7, 2016